Download png, svg
AI explanation
The influx of beauty brought a whole new meaning to the term "home run," leading to a higher score for the Guardians. With all the contestants vying for the crown, it seems they also brought some luck to the baseball diamond, batting their way to victory. It's as if the universe decided to shift its focus from beauty pageants to base hits, proving that in the game of baseball, it's not just about the stunning catches, but also the striking wins.Model: dalle-3
Prompt: Generate an image of a bustling stadium filled with enthusiastic fans, with the Cleveland Guardians players proudly taking the field adorned in sashes and crowns characteristic of Miss World pageant contestants. The number of Miss World delegates should be noticeably fewer, yet the team exudes unwavering confidence. Capture the scene as the Guardians revel in another triumph on the field, evoking an air of jubilation and celebration. The overall visual should be vibrant, dynamic, and celebratory, resembling the cover of a Discovery magazine that captivates the audience's attention. The depiction should include only scenes, people, and objects, it should not include text or speech bubbles.
This image generation prompt was also generated by AI, using the following sequence:
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You select one of a few potential scene descriptors that seems to go along with the variables described. You respond only with the scene descriptions provided and say nothing else.
User prompt: Here are two variables: Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. Given these, which of the following image style descriptions seems most appropriate? Pick the one that seems to be related to one of the variables at hand. Please respond with only one of the following potential descriptions: Steampunk A Discovery magazine cover image a meme Data cyber art An image that looks like it is a scene from 'Star Wars'
ChatGPT: A Discovery magazine cover image
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You describe simple visual scenes that depict the two variables stated. You combine both variables into one scene.
User prompt: Please describe a visual scene that prominently depicts both Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians, in the following situation: Because when there are fewer Miss World delegates, the Guardians players feel extra pretty and confident, leading to more wins.. Keep the description simple.
ChatGPT: A stadium packed with cheering fans as the Cleveland Guardians players take the field, all wearing sashes and crowns from a Miss World pageant. The number of Miss World delegates is visibly less, but the team's confidence is at an all-time high. As a result, the Guardians celebrate another victory on the field.
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You write and improve image generation prompts for DALLE-3. You maintain the same subjects, but enhance the visuals.
User prompt: Please respond with an image generation prompt that would be likely to create an interesting visual using DALLE-3, using the following style: [ A Discovery magazine cover image ] and depicting this scene: A stadium packed with cheering fans as the Cleveland Guardians players take the field, all wearing sashes and crowns from a Miss World pageant. The number of Miss World delegates is visibly less, but the team's confidence is at an all-time high. As a result, the Guardians celebrate another victory on the field. Keep the visual depiction simple. Do not include any words or speech bubbles.
ChatGPT: Generate an image of a bustling stadium filled with enthusiastic fans, with the Cleveland Guardians players proudly taking the field adorned in sashes and crowns characteristic of Miss World pageant contestants. The number of Miss World delegates should be noticeably fewer, yet the team exudes unwavering confidence. Capture the scene as the Guardians revel in another triumph on the field, evoking an air of jubilation and celebration. The overall visual should be vibrant, dynamic, and celebratory, resembling the cover of a Discovery magazine that captivates the audience's attention.
*Variations in the User Prompts from chart to chart are just the result of random number generation in Python. I wrote a few arrays of various styles and methods to ask questions to change up the results. Every time this site writes an explanation or generates an image, the script picks from each at random.
I sequence the requests into multiple prompts because I find GPT 3.5 to perform much better with short, well-managed contexts. Thus, I track the context directly in Python and only ask ChatGPT targeted questions.
System prompt: You provide humorous responses in the form of plausible sounding explanations for correlations. You assume the correlation is causative for the purpose of the explanation even if it is ridiculous. You do not chat with the user, you only reply with the causal connection explanation and nothing else.
User prompt: Please make up a funny explanation for how an increase in Number of Miss World delegates caused Wins for the Cleveland Guardians to increase. Include one good pun.
AI academic paper
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins The Journal of Pop Culture Statistics Jan 2024 Reminder: This paper is AI-generated. Not real! |
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You write titles and abstracts of goofy academic research papers.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, and add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please draft the title and abstract of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Include a pun in the title.
Your research team used data from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com to assess this nagging question. You found a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098 and p < 0.01 for 1975 to 2021.
Please respond in this format (replace "Lorem ipsum dolor sit" with your title and abstract)
[[TITLE]]
Lorem ipsum dolor sit
[[ABSTRACT]]
Lorem ipsum dolor sit
ChatGPT:
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft the introduction section of an academic research paper.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up the introduction section of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Here is the title and abstract of the paper:
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
-------
Your response should start like this:
[[INTRODUCTION]]
ChatGPT:
**[[INTRODUCTION]]**
Why did the statistician go to the baseball game? Because he heard they had good "mean" averages! In this study, we set out to investigate the peculiar relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. While it may sound as unlikely as a designated hitter winning a beauty contest, our analysis uncovered a surprising connection that will leave even the most seasoned researchers scratching their heads.
The idea for this research stemmed from a casual conversation at a local sports bar, where a passionate baseball fan and a beauty pageant enthusiast found themselves pondering the age-old question: "Do beauty pageants have a hand in the game of baseball?" As amusing as it may sound, our study took this playful inquiry and turned it into a thought-provoking investigation that not only drives curiosity but challenges traditional assumptions.
It's not often that a statistical analysis involves both evening gowns and batting averages, but sometimes the most unexpected pairings lead to the most groundbreaking discoveries. It's like finding out that your favorite pitcher also has a killer talent for doing hair and makeup – a real curveball, if you will!
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft a literature review section of an academic research paper, that starts out dry for the first few sentences but then becomes hilarious and goofy.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up a literature review section of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Speak in the present tense for this section (the authors find...), as is common in academic research paper literature reviews. Name the sources in a format similar to this: In "Book," the authors find lorem and ipsum.
Make up the lorem and ipsum part, but make it sound related to the topic at hand.
Start by naming serious-sounding studies by authors like Smith, Doe, and Jones - but then quickly devolve. Name some real non-fiction books that would be related to the topic. Then name some real fiction books that sound like they could be related. Perhaps you also got inspiration from some board games that are vaugely related.
Here is the title and abstract of the paper:
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
-------
And here is the introduction section that led to this literature review:
[[INTRODUCTION]]
Why did the statistician go to the baseball game? Because he heard they had good "mean" averages! In this study, we set out to investigate the peculiar relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. While it may sound as unlikely as a designated hitter winning a beauty contest, our analysis uncovered a surprising connection that will leave even the most seasoned researchers scratching their heads.
The idea for this research stemmed from a casual conversation at a local sports bar, where a passionate baseball fan and a beauty pageant enthusiast found themselves pondering the age-old question: "Do beauty pageants have a hand in the game of baseball?" As amusing as it may sound, our study took this playful inquiry and turned it into a thought-provoking investigation that not only drives curiosity but challenges traditional assumptions.
It's not often that a statistical analysis involves both evening gowns and batting averages, but sometimes the most unexpected pairings lead to the most groundbreaking discoveries. It's like finding out that your favorite pitcher also has a killer talent for doing hair and makeup – a real curveball, if you will!
-------
Your response should start like this:
[[LITERATURE REVIEW]]
ChatGPT:
[[LITERATURE REVIEW]]
The relationship between beauty pageants and baseball seems as incongruous as a pitcher in a tutu, yet our investigation reveals a surprising statistical connection. While this topic may initially appear to be as mismatched as a baseball player attempting to strut down the Miss World runway, the evidence we present is as solid as a well-executed bunt.
In "Statistical Analysis of Unlikely Connections," Smith et al. examine unusual correlations in various domains, prompting us to consider unexpected relationships in our own research. Lorem and ipsum.
As inconceivable as it might sound, "The Statistical Power of Beauty Pageants" by Doe presents compelling evidence that beauty pageant participation could influence unexpected outcomes. Lorem and ipsum.
Moving beyond the realm of statistical analyses, "Beauty Queens and Home Runs: A Tale of Two Worlds" by Jones explores the unlikely connections between beauty pageants and sports, sparking our curiosity and inspiring us to delve into this quirky association in our own research. Lorem and ipsum.
Now, shifting gears to less conventional sources, "Miss Congeniality: The Untold Story of Baseball and Pageant Queens" by Sandra Bullock offers a fictional yet entertaining perspective on the potential influence of beauty pageants on sports. Lorem and ipsum.
Furthermore, "Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unconventional Beauty Contest" by Michael Lewis sheds light on the unorthodox strategies that can lead to success in unexpected arenas, providing a tangentially relevant narrative to our investigation. Lorem and ipsum.
Adding a whimsical touch, the board game "Miss World Monopoly" may not directly relate to our research, but it serves as a lighthearted reminder that unexpected connections can lead to delightful surprises – much like the findings of our study.
As we delve further into the juncture of beauty pageants and baseball, this literature review serves as a reminder that in the world of research, just like in the game of baseball, sometimes the most unexpected variables can turn out to be game-changers. It's like discovering that a triple play can also land you a perfect score in the talent portion – an unexpected, yet undeniably winning combination!
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft the methodology section of an academic research paper.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up the methodology section of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Your research team collected data from all across the internet, but mostly just used information from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com . You used data from 1975 to 2021
Make up the research methods you don't know. Make them a bit goofy and convoluted.
Here is the title, abstract, and introduction of the paper:
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
[[INTRODUCTION]]
Why did the statistician go to the baseball game? Because he heard they had good "mean" averages! In this study, we set out to investigate the peculiar relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. While it may sound as unlikely as a designated hitter winning a beauty contest, our analysis uncovered a surprising connection that will leave even the most seasoned researchers scratching their heads.
The idea for this research stemmed from a casual conversation at a local sports bar, where a passionate baseball fan and a beauty pageant enthusiast found themselves pondering the age-old question: "Do beauty pageants have a hand in the game of baseball?" As amusing as it may sound, our study took this playful inquiry and turned it into a thought-provoking investigation that not only drives curiosity but challenges traditional assumptions.
It's not often that a statistical analysis involves both evening gowns and batting averages, but sometimes the most unexpected pairings lead to the most groundbreaking discoveries. It's like finding out that your favorite pitcher also has a killer talent for doing hair and makeup – a real curveball, if you will!
-------
Your response should start like this:
[[METHODOLOGY]]
ChatGPT:
[[METHODOLOGY]]
To unravel the mysterious ties between Miss World delegates and the wins of the Cleveland Guardians, we employed a research methodology as multifaceted as a diamond-encrusted baseball. Our first step in this grand statistical adventure involved gathering data from various sources including Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com. This pursuit required scouring the digital universe as thoroughly as a player scouting for the perfect pitch.
One of our key methodologies involved employing a proprietary algorithm we affectionately dubbed the "Beauty-Ball Equation." This equation combined the number of Miss World delegates from each country with the batting averages and fielding percentages of the Cleveland Guardians, resulting in a statistical medley more intriguing than a beauty pageant contestant who moonlights as a baseball pitcher. And let me tell you, that's a sight to behold!
A critical aspect of our approach involved using regression analysis to determine the relationship between the number of Miss World delegates and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. We christened this statistical undertaking "The Diamond Crown Model" as an homage to the intersection of beauty and the elusive quest for a baseball championship. Just like a knuckleball can leave a batter flustered, our model left us scratching our heads and recalculating coefficients to ensure the most robust and reliable findings.
To further strengthen our analysis, we computed various statistical measures such as correlation coefficients, standard errors, and p-values. These calculations not only demanded the precision of a radar-gun reading but also the nuance of a beauty pageant judge critiquing a talent performance – it was a delicate balance between innings and evening gowns, let me tell you!
Our research also involved a qualitative component in the form of interviews with baseball aficionados and beauty pageant enthusiasts. These conversations provided invaluable insight into the cultural and societal influences that underpin the relationship between these seemingly unrelated domains. It was like approaching a high-pressure game with the finesse of a contestant in the final moments of a talent competition - a thrilling and sometimes nerve-wracking experience!
Lastly, we implemented a cross-sectional analysis to evaluate the data from 1975 to 2021, analyzing trends, outliers, and anomalies. This process was as intricate as a last-minute eyelash extension before strutting down the runway, ensuring that we accounted for all possible factors that could impact our findings.
In an endeavor as distinctive as this, we embraced the unexpected with the fervor of a baseball player diving for a fly ball and the elegance of a Miss World delegate gracefully walking the stage. Because when beauty and baseball come together, you can bet it's going to be a grand slam of a study!
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft the results section of an academic research paper. You speak in the past tense (you found...).
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up the results section of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Your research team collected data from all across the internet, but mostly just used information from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com .
For the time period 1975 to 2021, you found a correlation 0.5539098, r-squared of 0.3068161, and p < 0.01.
One figure will be included. The figure (Fig. 1) is a scatterplot showing the strong correlation between the two variables. You don't need to specify where; I will add the figure.
Here is the title and abstract of the paper:
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
-------
And here is the methodology section that led to this result:
[[METHODOLOGY]]
Why did the statistician go to the baseball game? Because he heard they had good "mean" averages! In this study, we set out to investigate the peculiar relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. While it may sound as unlikely as a designated hitter winning a beauty contest, our analysis uncovered a surprising connection that will leave even the most seasoned researchers scratching their heads.
The idea for this research stemmed from a casual conversation at a local sports bar, where a passionate baseball fan and a beauty pageant enthusiast found themselves pondering the age-old question: "Do beauty pageants have a hand in the game of baseball?" As amusing as it may sound, our study took this playful inquiry and turned it into a thought-provoking investigation that not only drives curiosity but challenges traditional assumptions.
It's not often that a statistical analysis involves both evening gowns and batting averages, but sometimes the most unexpected pairings lead to the most groundbreaking discoveries. It's like finding out that your favorite pitcher also has a killer talent for doing hair and makeup – a real curveball, if you will!
-------
Your response should start like this:
[[RESULTS]]
ChatGPT:
[[RESULTS]]
Our results confirm a significant positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians from 1975 to 2021. The correlation coefficient of 0.5539098 indicates a moderately strong relationship between these two seemingly unrelated variables. It's as if the baseball diamond and the beauty pageant stage are dancing to the same statistical tune!
The r-squared value of 0.3068161 suggests that approximately 30.68% of the variability in the Cleveland Guardians' wins can be explained by the number of Miss World delegates from the countries represented. That's about as clear as a well-executed pop fly in a stadium full of statisticians!
Furthermore, the p-value of < 0.01 provides strong evidence to reject the null hypothesis, indicating that the correlation is statistically significant. It seems that the beauty contest road might just lead to a home run for the Cleveland Guardians!
Fig. 1 illustrates the scatterplot showing the strong positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. As the Miss World participation increases, so do the wins for the Guardians. It's as if the beauty queens are passing on their lucky charms to the baseball team!
In summary, our findings suggest that there is indeed a surprising and significant relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. This unexpected correlation adds a touch of whimsy and wonder to the field of statistical analysis. It's as if the baseball diamond became a runway and the beauty pageant stage transformed into a home plate – a truly unexpected match made in statistical heaven!
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft the discussion section of an academic research paper.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up the discussion section of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Limit your response to 500 tokens.
Here are the title, abstract, literature review, and results sections. Please harken back to 1-2 of the goofy items in the literature review, but pretend to take them completely seriously. Discuss how your results supported the prior research.
Do not write a conclusion. I will add a conclusion after this.
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
[[LITERATURE REVIEW]]
The relationship between beauty pageants and baseball seems as incongruous as a pitcher in a tutu, yet our investigation reveals a surprising statistical connection. While this topic may initially appear to be as mismatched as a baseball player attempting to strut down the Miss World runway, the evidence we present is as solid as a well-executed bunt.
In "Statistical Analysis of Unlikely Connections," Smith et al. examine unusual correlations in various domains, prompting us to consider unexpected relationships in our own research. Lorem and ipsum.
As inconceivable as it might sound, "The Statistical Power of Beauty Pageants" by Doe presents compelling evidence that beauty pageant participation could influence unexpected outcomes. Lorem and ipsum.
Moving beyond the realm of statistical analyses, "Beauty Queens and Home Runs: A Tale of Two Worlds" by Jones explores the unlikely connections between beauty pageants and sports, sparking our curiosity and inspiring us to delve into this quirky association in our own research. Lorem and ipsum.
Now, shifting gears to less conventional sources, "Miss Congeniality: The Untold Story of Baseball and Pageant Queens" by Sandra Bullock offers a fictional yet entertaining perspective on the potential influence of beauty pageants on sports. Lorem and ipsum.
Furthermore, "Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unconventional Beauty Contest" by Michael Lewis sheds light on the unorthodox strategies that can lead to success in unexpected arenas, providing a tangentially relevant narrative to our investigation. Lorem and ipsum.
Adding a whimsical touch, the board game "Miss World Monopoly" may not directly relate to our research, but it serves as a lighthearted reminder that unexpected connections can lead to delightful surprises – much like the findings of our study.
As we delve further into the juncture of beauty pageants and baseball, this literature review serves as a reminder that in the world of research, just like in the game of baseball, sometimes the most unexpected variables can turn out to be game-changers. It's like discovering that a triple play can also land you a perfect score in the talent portion – an unexpected, yet undeniably winning combination!
[[RESULTS]]
Our results confirm a significant positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians from 1975 to 2021. The correlation coefficient of 0.5539098 indicates a moderately strong relationship between these two seemingly unrelated variables. It's as if the baseball diamond and the beauty pageant stage are dancing to the same statistical tune!
The r-squared value of 0.3068161 suggests that approximately 30.68% of the variability in the Cleveland Guardians' wins can be explained by the number of Miss World delegates from the countries represented. That's about as clear as a well-executed pop fly in a stadium full of statisticians!
Furthermore, the p-value of < 0.01 provides strong evidence to reject the null hypothesis, indicating that the correlation is statistically significant. It seems that the beauty contest road might just lead to a home run for the Cleveland Guardians!
Fig. 1 illustrates the scatterplot showing the strong positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. As the Miss World participation increases, so do the wins for the Guardians. It's as if the beauty queens are passing on their lucky charms to the baseball team!
In summary, our findings suggest that there is indeed a surprising and significant relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. This unexpected correlation adds a touch of whimsy and wonder to the field of statistical analysis. It's as if the baseball diamond became a runway and the beauty pageant stage transformed into a home plate – a truly unexpected match made in statistical heaven!
-------
Your response should start like this:
[[DISCUSSION]]
ChatGPT:
[[DISCUSSION]]
The findings of our study provide striking support for the prior research that seemed as unlikely as a baseball bat wielding beauty queen. Our results align with the investigation by Smith et al., which highlighted improbable correlations across diverse domains. The connection we uncovered is as solid as a well-constructed pun, reinforcing the idea that unexpected relationships can indeed hold statistical significance.
Similarly, the work of Doe on the potential influence of beauty pageants on unexpected outcomes finds resonance in our study. Our statistical evidence solidifies the notion that beauty pageant participation may exert an unforeseen impact on the performance of the Cleveland Guardians, much like a surprise curveball altering the game's trajectory.
Additionally, the exploration by Jones into the unlikely connection between beauty pageants and sports sparked our curiosity and laid the foundation for our investigation. Our findings serve to underpin the idea that unusual associations are worthy of statistical scrutiny, much like a knuckleball that captivates both spectators and researchers with its unpredictability.
Furthermore, while the literary work of Sandra Bullock provided a fictional perspective, our empirical results lend credence to the entertaining notion of the potential influence of beauty pageants on sports. It seems that the quirky, unconventional strategies illuminated by Michael Lewis in "Moneyball" are manifesting in an unforeseen domain, akin to a surprising defensive shift that catches the opposition off-guard.
In sum, our study substantiates the unexpected connections highlighted in the literature, reinforcing the notion that indeed, beauty pageants and baseball might just make for an unlikely but statistically significant winning duo! This unexpected relationship adds a touch of whimsy and delight to the usually staid landscape of statistical research. It's akin to hitting a grand slam with a dad joke in a room full of serious scholars - an outcome as delightful as it is surprising!
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You are a researcher writing an academic paper.You draft the discussion section of goofy academic research papers that sounds like it belongs based on the title and abstract provided.
User prompt:
Pretend you are an academic researcher. Your writing sounds like it belongs in a medical or economics journal. However, you frequently crack jokes, make puns, or add unexpected twists in your writing.
Please make up a short conclusion of an academic research paper presenting the findings of the connection between Number of Miss World delegates and Wins for the Cleveland Guardians. You can't resist a good dad joke. Add a relevant dad joke related to the content every couple of sentences.
Limit your response to 300 tokens. At the very end, assert that no more research is needed in this area.
Here are the title, abstract, introduction, and results sections.
[[TITLE]]
Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
[[ABSTRACT]]
Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
[[INTRDUCTION]]
Why did the statistician go to the baseball game? Because he heard they had good "mean" averages! In this study, we set out to investigate the peculiar relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the performance of the Cleveland Guardians. While it may sound as unlikely as a designated hitter winning a beauty contest, our analysis uncovered a surprising connection that will leave even the most seasoned researchers scratching their heads.
The idea for this research stemmed from a casual conversation at a local sports bar, where a passionate baseball fan and a beauty pageant enthusiast found themselves pondering the age-old question: "Do beauty pageants have a hand in the game of baseball?" As amusing as it may sound, our study took this playful inquiry and turned it into a thought-provoking investigation that not only drives curiosity but challenges traditional assumptions.
It's not often that a statistical analysis involves both evening gowns and batting averages, but sometimes the most unexpected pairings lead to the most groundbreaking discoveries. It's like finding out that your favorite pitcher also has a killer talent for doing hair and makeup – a real curveball, if you will!
[[RESULTS]]
Our results confirm a significant positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians from 1975 to 2021. The correlation coefficient of 0.5539098 indicates a moderately strong relationship between these two seemingly unrelated variables. It's as if the baseball diamond and the beauty pageant stage are dancing to the same statistical tune!
The r-squared value of 0.3068161 suggests that approximately 30.68% of the variability in the Cleveland Guardians' wins can be explained by the number of Miss World delegates from the countries represented. That's about as clear as a well-executed pop fly in a stadium full of statisticians!
Furthermore, the p-value of < 0.01 provides strong evidence to reject the null hypothesis, indicating that the correlation is statistically significant. It seems that the beauty contest road might just lead to a home run for the Cleveland Guardians!
Fig. 1 illustrates the scatterplot showing the strong positive correlation between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. As the Miss World participation increases, so do the wins for the Guardians. It's as if the beauty queens are passing on their lucky charms to the baseball team!
In summary, our findings suggest that there is indeed a surprising and significant relationship between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. This unexpected correlation adds a touch of whimsy and wonder to the field of statistical analysis. It's as if the baseball diamond became a runway and the beauty pageant stage transformed into a home plate – a truly unexpected match made in statistical heaven!
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Your response should start like this:
[[CONCLUSION]]
ChatGPT:
[[CONCLUSION]]
In conclusion, it seems that the connection between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians is as undeniable as a well-hit line drive! Our study has unveiled a correlation that, just like a classic dad joke, may elicit both surprise and amusement. But the numbers don't lie – it's clear that this statistical relationship is as solid as a well-crafted pun!
This unexpected bond between beauty pageants and baseball has brought a unique twist to the realm of statistical analysis. It's like finding out that a hitter's lucky charm is a tiara and a sash – a real game-changer, if you will!
As our findings provide statistical evidence linking the success of the Cleveland Guardians to the number of Miss World delegates, we are left with the delightful notion that beauty may indeed be influencing the game of baseball. Who knew that a well-executed curveball would have a statistical counterpart in the world of beauty pagents!
It's safe to say that our analysis has hit it out of the park, shedding light on this truly unexpected correlation. It's as if the statistics and the beauty pageants decided to team up and deliver a grand slam of a discovery!
Therefore, based on our comprehensive analysis, it is evident that no more research is needed in investigating the connection between the number of Miss World delegates and the wins for the Cleveland Guardians. This study has not only added a touch of humor and whimsy to the field of statistical research but also highlighted the intriguing potential influence of beauty pageants on the world of baseball. It's as if these seemingly distinct worlds have converged to produce a statistical "beauty and the baseball" tale that requires no further exploration.
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You provide fictional names of academic journals. You say nothing else, and you do not chat with the user.
User prompt: Please provide the name of a funny but plausible sounding research, scientific, or academic journal that would publish a paper entited Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins. Respond only with the name of a fictional academic journal.
ChatGPT:
The Journal of Pop Culture Statistics
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You provide fictional names of nonprofit research organizations and associations. You say nothing else, and you do not chat with the user.
User prompt: Please provide the name of a funny but plausible sounding nonprofit, academic, or scientific association or organization that would sponsor research that resulted in a paper entited Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins. Respond only with the name of a fictional organization.
ChatGPT:
The Institute for Global Beauty and Sports Analysis
Model: gpt-3.5-turbo-1106
System prompt: You provide potential search keywords separated by commas. You say nothing else, and you do not chat with the user.
User prompt: Please provide potential search keywords for a paper titled Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins with an abstract of Our study delves into the unexpected link between the number of Miss World delegates from a country and the success of the Cleveland Guardians. While this correlation may seem as random as a dad joke, our rigorous analysis of data from 1975 to 2021 points to a surprising connection. We scrutinized statistics from Wikipedia and Baseball-Reference.com and uncovered a correlation coefficient of 0.5539098, with a p-value below 0.01. This means the relationship is statistically significant, lending weight to the idea that beauty pageant participation could be influencing the baseball team's performance. As the saying goes, "Beauty and baseball make a home run duo!" Our findings not only shed light on this truly unusual association but also add a touch of humor to the usually serious realm of statistical research.
ChatGPT:
Miss World delegates, Cleveland Guardians, success, statistical study, correlation, data analysis, baseball team performance, beauty pageant participation, association, statistical significance, relationship, humor, statistical research
*There is a bunch of Python happening behind the scenes to turn this prompt sequence into a PDF.
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Data details
Number of Miss World delegatesSource: Wikipedia
See what else correlates with Number of Miss World delegates
Wins for the Cleveland Guardians
Detailed data title: The total number of season wins for the Cleveland Guardians
Source: Baseball-Reference.com
See what else correlates with Wins for the Cleveland Guardians
Correlation is a measure of how much the variables move together. If it is 0.99, when one goes up the other goes up. If it is 0.02, the connection is very weak or non-existent. If it is -0.99, then when one goes up the other goes down. If it is 1.00, you probably messed up your correlation function.
r2 = 0.3068161 (Coefficient of determination)
This means 30.7% of the change in the one variable (i.e., Wins for the Cleveland Guardians) is predictable based on the change in the other (i.e., Number of Miss World delegates) over the 47 years from 1975 through 2021.
p < 0.01, which is statistically significant(Null hypothesis significance test)
The p-value is 5.4E-5. 0.0000536637254712540500000000
The p-value is a measure of how probable it is that we would randomly find a result this extreme. More specifically the p-value is a measure of how probable it is that we would randomly find a result this extreme if we had only tested one pair of variables one time.
But I am a p-villain. I absolutely did not test only one pair of variables one time. I correlated hundreds of millions of pairs of variables. I threw boatloads of data into an industrial-sized blender to find this correlation.
Who is going to stop me? p-value reporting doesn't require me to report how many calculations I had to go through in order to find a low p-value!
On average, you will find a correaltion as strong as 0.55 in 0.0054% of random cases. Said differently, if you correlated 18,635 random variables Which I absolutely did.
with the same 46 degrees of freedom, Degrees of freedom is a measure of how many free components we are testing. In this case it is 46 because we have two variables measured over a period of 47 years. It's just the number of years minus ( the number of variables minus one ), which in this case simplifies to the number of years minus one.
you would randomly expect to find a correlation as strong as this one.
[ 0.32, 0.73 ] 95% correlation confidence interval (using the Fisher z-transformation)
The confidence interval is an estimate the range of the value of the correlation coefficient, using the correlation itself as an input. The values are meant to be the low and high end of the correlation coefficient with 95% confidence.
This one is a bit more complciated than the other calculations, but I include it because many people have been pushing for confidence intervals instead of p-value calculations (for example: NEJM. However, if you are dredging data, you can reliably find yourself in the 5%. That's my goal!
All values for the years included above: If I were being very sneaky, I could trim years from the beginning or end of the datasets to increase the correlation on some pairs of variables. I don't do that because there are already plenty of correlations in my database without monkeying with the years.
Still, sometimes one of the variables has more years of data available than the other. This page only shows the overlapping years. To see all the years, click on "See what else correlates with..." link above.
1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
Number of Miss World delegates (Delegates) | 67 | 60 | 62 | 68 | 69 | 67 | 67 | 68 | 72 | 72 | 78 | 77 | 78 | 84 | 78 | 81 | 78 | 83 | 81 | 87 | 84 | 88 | 86 | 86 | 94 | 95 | 93 | 88 | 106 | 107 | 102 | 104 | 106 | 109 | 112 | 115 | 113 | 116 | 127 | 121 | 114 | 117 | 118 | 118 | 111 | 0 | 97 |
Wins for the Cleveland Guardians (Game wins) | 79 | 81 | 71 | 69 | 81 | 79 | 52 | 78 | 70 | 75 | 60 | 84 | 61 | 78 | 73 | 77 | 57 | 76 | 76 | 66 | 100 | 99 | 86 | 89 | 97 | 90 | 91 | 74 | 68 | 80 | 93 | 78 | 96 | 81 | 65 | 69 | 80 | 68 | 92 | 85 | 81 | 94 | 102 | 91 | 93 | 35 | 80 |
Why this works
- Data dredging: I have 25,153 variables in my database. I compare all these variables against each other to find ones that randomly match up. That's 632,673,409 correlation calculations! This is called “data dredging.” Instead of starting with a hypothesis and testing it, I instead abused the data to see what correlations shake out. It’s a dangerous way to go about analysis, because any sufficiently large dataset will yield strong correlations completely at random.
- Lack of causal connection: There is probably
Because these pages are automatically generated, it's possible that the two variables you are viewing are in fact causually related. I take steps to prevent the obvious ones from showing on the site (I don't let data about the weather in one city correlate with the weather in a neighboring city, for example), but sometimes they still pop up. If they are related, cool! You found a loophole.
no direct connection between these variables, despite what the AI says above. This is exacerbated by the fact that I used "Years" as the base variable. Lots of things happen in a year that are not related to each other! Most studies would use something like "one person" in stead of "one year" to be the "thing" studied. - Observations not independent: For many variables, sequential years are not independent of each other. If a population of people is continuously doing something every day, there is no reason to think they would suddenly change how they are doing that thing on January 1. A simple
Personally I don't find any p-value calculation to be 'simple,' but you know what I mean.
p-value calculation does not take this into account, so mathematically it appears less probable than it really is. - Confounding variable: 2020 is particularly different from the other years on this graph. Confounding variables (like global pandemics) will cause two variables to look connected when in fact a "sneaky third" variable is influencing both of them behind the scenes.
- Y-axis doesn't start at zero: I truncated the Y-axes of the graph above. I also used a line graph, which makes the visual connection stand out more than it deserves.
Nothing against line graphs. They are great at telling a story when you have linear data! But visually it is deceptive because the only data is at the points on the graph, not the lines on the graph. In between each point, the data could have been doing anything. Like going for a random walk by itself!
Mathematically what I showed is true, but it is intentionally misleading. Below is the same chart but with both Y-axes starting at zero.
Try it yourself
You can calculate the values on this page on your own! Try running the Python code to see the calculation results. Step 1: Download and install Python on your computer.Step 2: Open a plaintext editor like Notepad and paste the code below into it.
Step 3: Save the file as "calculate_correlation.py" in a place you will remember, like your desktop. Copy the file location to your clipboard. On Windows, you can right-click the file and click "Properties," and then copy what comes after "Location:" As an example, on my computer the location is "C:\Users\tyler\Desktop"
Step 4: Open a command line window. For example, by pressing start and typing "cmd" and them pressing enter.
Step 5: Install the required modules by typing "pip install numpy", then pressing enter, then typing "pip install scipy", then pressing enter.
Step 6: Navigate to the location where you saved the Python file by using the "cd" command. For example, I would type "cd C:\Users\tyler\Desktop" and push enter.
Step 7: Run the Python script by typing "python calculate_correlation.py"
If you run into any issues, I suggest asking ChatGPT to walk you through installing Python and running the code below on your system. Try this question:
"Walk me through installing Python on my computer to run a script that uses scipy and numpy. Go step-by-step and ask me to confirm before moving on. Start by asking me questions about my operating system so that you know how to proceed. Assume I want the simplest installation with the latest version of Python and that I do not currently have any of the necessary elements installed. Remember to only give me one step per response and confirm I have done it before proceeding."
# These modules make it easier to perform the calculation
import numpy as np
from scipy import stats
# We'll define a function that we can call to return the correlation calculations
def calculate_correlation(array1, array2):
# Calculate Pearson correlation coefficient and p-value
correlation, p_value = stats.pearsonr(array1, array2)
# Calculate R-squared as the square of the correlation coefficient
r_squared = correlation**2
return correlation, r_squared, p_value
# These are the arrays for the variables shown on this page, but you can modify them to be any two sets of numbers
array_1 = np.array([67,60,62,68,69,67,67,68,72,72,78,77,78,84,78,81,78,83,81,87,84,88,86,86,94,95,93,88,106,107,102,104,106,109,112,115,113,116,127,121,114,117,118,118,111,0,97,])
array_2 = np.array([79,81,71,69,81,79,52,78,70,75,60,84,61,78,73,77,57,76,76,66,100,99,86,89,97,90,91,74,68,80,93,78,96,81,65,69,80,68,92,85,81,94,102,91,93,35,80,])
array_1_name = "Number of Miss World delegates"
array_2_name = "Wins for the Cleveland Guardians"
# Perform the calculation
print(f"Calculating the correlation between {array_1_name} and {array_2_name}...")
correlation, r_squared, p_value = calculate_correlation(array_1, array_2)
# Print the results
print("Correlation Coefficient:", correlation)
print("R-squared:", r_squared)
print("P-value:", p_value)
Reuseable content
You may re-use the images on this page for any purpose, even commercial purposes, without asking for permission. The only requirement is that you attribute Tyler Vigen. Attribution can take many different forms. If you leave the "tylervigen.com" link in the image, that satisfies it just fine. If you remove it and move it to a footnote, that's fine too. You can also just write "Charts courtesy of Tyler Vigen" at the bottom of an article.You do not need to attribute "the spurious correlations website," and you don't even need to link here if you don't want to. I don't gain anything from pageviews. There are no ads on this site, there is nothing for sale, and I am not for hire.
For the record, I am just one person. Tyler Vigen, he/him/his. I do have degrees, but they should not go after my name unless you want to annoy my wife. If that is your goal, then go ahead and cite me as "Tyler Vigen, A.A. A.A.S. B.A. J.D." Otherwise it is just "Tyler Vigen."
When spoken, my last name is pronounced "vegan," like I don't eat meat.
Full license details.
For more on re-use permissions, or to get a signed release form, see tylervigen.com/permission.
Download images for these variables:
- High resolution line chart
The image linked here is a Scalable Vector Graphic (SVG). It is the highest resolution that is possible to achieve. It scales up beyond the size of the observable universe without pixelating. You do not need to email me asking if I have a higher resolution image. I do not. The physical limitations of our universe prevent me from providing you with an image that is any higher resolution than this one.
If you insert it into a PowerPoint presentation (a tool well-known for managing things that are the scale of the universe), you can right-click > "Ungroup" or "Create Shape" and then edit the lines and text directly. You can also change the colors this way.
Alternatively you can use a tool like Inkscape. - High resolution line chart, optimized for mobile
- Alternative high resolution line chart
- Scatterplot
- Portable line chart (png)
- Portable line chart (png), optimized for mobile
- Line chart for only Number of Miss World delegates
- Line chart for only Wins for the Cleveland Guardians
- AI-generated correlation image
- The spurious research paper: Crowning Connections: A Statistical Study of Miss World Delegates and the Cleveland Guardians Wins
Cheers to you for rating this correlation!
Correlation ID: 3619 · Black Variable ID: 76 · Red Variable ID: 4305